Works-For-Me Wednesday: Sources for inexpensive prints

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I wanted to share today some sources for inexpensive prints to decorate your home with.

1. Cards

This is from a card that happened to be 8×10, so it fit perfectly in that size frame. But many smaller cards can fit into a 5×7″ frame. This combines my love of bears, hearts, and Scripture (not in that order. 🙂 ). The verse says, “A cheerful heart enjoys a continual feast. Proverbs 15:15.”

Bear tea

2. Calendars

This came from a D. Morgan calendar. Even though the dimensions aren’t quite 8×10, it fit by allowing for some of the edge around the calendar picture to be a border. The wallpaper in the upstairs bathroom looked like sand dunes to me, and I found a couple of inexpensive Thomas Kincaid lighthouse prints in a catalog once, so that set a lighthouse theme for this room.

lighthouse

3. Unframed prints

A friend told me years ago that framing shops will sometimes have a section of inexpensive unframed prints. Most of them won’t fit into the standard (and less expensive) frames, but with a mat sometimes you can make it work. You can always get a custom frame, but that can get expensive (be sure to check your Sunday paper for Michael’s 50% off custom framing coupons. 🙂 ) This print was, if I remember correctly, about $6 some 15-20 years ago — the prices may be higher now. The dimensions were some odd size, but I was able to fit the main part of the picture behind this mat and then into a standard frame (I think this is 16×20). This also combines a couple of my loves, reading and pink roses, and I love the peacefulness of it. Please forgive the glare there — the other shots I tried without the flash were shadowy or showed up the reflection rather than the print.

lady reading

You can find great tips and/or share yours at Rocks In My Dryer.

Why I blog

Erica at Butterfly Kisses tagged me for this meme in which we’re to list 5 reasons why we blog. Thanks for thinking of me, Erica! 🙂

1. I hope the Lord can use it as a ministry to encourage other Christian women and to be a light to those who do not yet know Christ as Savior.

2. Always, or at least often, in the back of my mind I have wanted to write, and the best way to learn to write well is to write, I’m told. What the Lord might do with that desire, I don’t know, but I do know that writing frequently in a blog has helped to sharpen my thinking and my expression and caused me to brush up on a few grammatical rules. 🙂

3. I am on an e-mail subscriber list for people with transverse myelitis, and it has been a great support system through the years. Now I am at the point of being able to encourage new folks there. But in general if I talk about the Lord very much, it’s frowned upon by some in the group. I wanted a place to be able to express myself freely in that regard. I’ve been so thankful that my blog stats frequently show that some search involving TM has led people to my blog, and I hope they found something here that’s helpful.

4. I can think things through when I write about them. Just the process of putting thoughts in writing helps me focus, sort, prioritize, draw conclusions, etc.

5. I’ve enjoyed “meeting” and interacting with other bloggers.

I think I’ll tag Kim, Susan, and Bet — and as always, if you don’t have time, I won’t be offended. 🙂 And if you’ve already done this, please forgive me — I have seen it here and there but can’t remember where.

Fabric hunting

I mentioned in an earlier post that I needed to do something about curtains for this room.

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I wanted to do something with a blue/beige/tan pattern to pull together the furniture, walls, carpet, and wall decorations. The walls are kind of an off-white, the furniture is tan, the carpet is beige with a little bit of blue, and many of the decorations in that room are blue. Since most of the other rooms are very feminine, with florals and pinks, I decided I wanted this one to be a little more masculine, so I decided I wanted some kind of plaid.

I couldn’t find any ready-made curtains I liked. I had seen at a friend’s house some red and tan checked curtains — a little bit heavier weave than gingham — with tan trim, and pillows with the red and tan check on one side and a red toile design centered on the other. I thought that would be just perfect for this room if I could find it in blue. I like this pattern (the bottom right hand corner) or maybe this one (top right hand corner) as a valance with just regular panels underneath.

If I had wanted it in navy blue, I could’ve found it, but though I can find that particular check in red, two shades of green, rust, lavender, pink, and I don’t remember what else, I couldn’t find it in blue. I wanted something like the shade here:

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You can’t see it real well, but it is kind of a medium shade of blue, a little on the greyish blue side, not greenish or yellowish.

The only two fabric store here are Wal-Mart and Hobby Lobby, and they didn’t have anything I liked. I went to some outlet places about 20 minutes away and got a few samples, but nothing really grabbed me. I’ve been trying for a few weeks now to get out to the next big town, about a 35-40 minute drive, but between Jesse getting sick, then me, then car trouble (one of the days I had planned to go but just didn’t get my act together in time, someone pointed out to me in the late afternoon that my tire was low, so I was glad I didn’t go that day! Thank you, Lord! We had the tire patched but then had to go ahead and get it replaced a few days later because it was still leaking.)

I finally made it out today. I went to Hancock’s Fabrics first (ours closed here last year. 😦 ). Surprisingly, they didn’t have anything other than the darker blue Waverly Fabrics that could be ordered. I had looked up fabric stores in the online yellow pages and was on my way to another store when I saw a billboard for discount decorator fabric store. I was able to find it….and man, talk about fabric heaven. I was almost drooling. They had such gorgeous stuff there. I got some more samples but still haven’t decided on one. Here are all the samples I’ve accumulated from my excursions.

Fabric

I think the two on the right are too greenish. The three in the middle are darker than I’d like. There are a couple in a much bigger print than I was originally looking for, but they caught my eye. I am kind of leaning toward the second one from the left. In “person” it is still a little brighter than I’d like, but I think it is the best so far. The one just to the right and above it is the color and texture I like, but I think the check is a little too small — it blends together and doesn’t look like a check. I got the one tan sample in the middle — even though I wanted to bring a blue in, that plaid just grabbed me. I’ve seen some other nice tan plaids but felt I would get tired of a mostly-neutral room. But I could bring more blue in with pillows and such, I suppose.

Am I too picky? 🙂 I give myself a headache with all the thinking about projects like this. But I want it as close to just right as I can get it. I can’t just throw any old thing up there. Well, I could, but it would be depressing to me.

Another problem is that even at outlet prices, most of these run between $10 and $15 a yard. The second store I went to today had a 20% off sale through Saturday, so that helps some. Someone suggested looking at sheets — I’ve only looked at Wal-Mart so far, and they didn’t have anything like any of these. There’s a discount place for sheets and such near downtown and one other fabric store I want to check.

Does anyone else besides me wrestle with frugality versus quality or beauty or getting just the right thing? Frugality sounds like the better virtue. But I used to buy clothes that way — nothing unless it was on clearance, etc., whether I could find colors that complemented my coloring or styles that I liked. It just really gets depressing to do that. I felt good about being frugal but not good about how I looked. I think there is a balance somewhere, both in clothing and in home decorating. Of course, we can’t just go all out without regard to price or time, but I don’t think it’s wrong to want to express creativity and beauty. Years ago I read The Hidden Art of Homemaking by Edith Schaeffer, and she addressed that the desire to do that isn’t wrong, that our Maker is wondrously creative, and since we are made in His image, it’s natural that we would want to be, too, yet we do have to keep it in balance with money, time, family priorities, etc.

Plus, a few years ago a friend of mine who had her own business told me that in one conversation with one her her vendors, he said that Christians in the area were known for appreciating quality but not wanting to pay for it. I don’t know if that’s the best testimony. I do think things are outrageously priced these days, and we do have to be economical, and it is wise to shop for bargains….but sometimes you get what you pay for, and sometimes quality costs.

I was thinking today that I don’t know if I have actually prayed about this yet. In a general way, of course, I’ve prayed for the Lord’s guidance and blessing, but I don’t think I prayed about this specifically. While I was at the fabric store I prayed that I might be able to either find what I was looking for or be able to adjust my thinking to something different, but I also need to pray for the Lord’s direction in this. I’m always delighted in people’s homes to hear stories of how the Lord provided a certain piece of furniture or a decoration. If I seek and follow His leading I won’t stray into spending too much of His resources and I’ll have the blessing of seeing how He provided.

Well, I don’t know if anyone is still reading this far, but it has been helpful to me to “think out loud” and get the right perspective. 🙂

Psalm Sunday: Psalm 8

1 O LORD, our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth! who hast set thy glory above the heavens.

2 Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength because of thine enemies, that thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger.

3 When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained;

4 What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him?

5 For thou hast made him a little lower than the angels, and hast crowned him with glory and honour.

6 Thou madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hands; thou hast put all things under his feet:

7 All sheep and oxen, yea, and the beasts of the field;

8 The fowl of the air, and the fish of the sea, and whatsoever passeth through the paths of the seas.

9 O LORD our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth!

One town we lived in during my teen years had less than 200 people. It boasted a grocery store, barbeque restaurant (which drew people from all over), a manufacturing plant where my father worked as a welder, a garage, a tavern, a church, and schools up through eighth grade. They bussed the high schoolers to the next town ten miles away. There was one traffic light. We had a “route” number rather than a street address, and we identified our house as “the house on the second hill.”

One of the nicest things about that house on that hill was the view of the sunsets. With the town a little below and a minimum of “city lights” and a wide-open sky, every evening brought a magnificent view.

Often while beholding a glorious array of colors on the sky’s canvas, I would be drawn to thoughts of God’s grandeur and majesty and man’s insignificance in contrast. What mere specks we are in the universe! Yet God created us and cares for us.

When I first “discovered” Psalm 8, I felt I thoroughly understood David’s meditations here. I could picture him on a hillside with his sheep, or on the roof of his palace, gazing up into the sky at the majesty of God’s handiwork, naturally flowing into praise and wonder.

Join us for other meditations on this Psalm at Butterfly Kisses.

Lord, You’re All I Need

This song has been on my heart today.

Lord, You’re All I Need

Words and music by James Tilson

Oft times I’ve tried to live my life
According to my will.
When darkness comes it’s difficult
To rest and just be still.
But Lord, You are my shepherd
That guides me in the way,
And I will learn this glorious truth
If I Your Word obey.

You’re all I need.
You’re the Lord of everything.
All I need —
This is why I humbly sing.
Your strength is sustaining
And your grace has made me free.
You’re my heart’s lone desire,
You’re all I need.

By wanting more I’ve wanted less
Than all You’ve given me.
You gave your all by laying down
Your life at Calvary.
So I surrender all, Lord
My best to You I give.
And thank you now for giving me
A reason to live.

You’re all I need.
You’re the Lord of everything.
All I need —
This is why I humbly sing.
Your strength is sustaining
And your grace has made me free.
You’re my heart’s lone desire,
You’re all I need.

More than enough,
You’re all I need.

You can hear the first 90 seconds of this song here — scroll down to the title and click.

Nostalgia

Linda at 2nd cup of coffee suggested that we put up unretouched photos of our senior proms for a little fun and nostalgia (and laughs, too, I’m sure!) At the Christian school I attended they had Spring Banquets rather than proms, and you could bring a date or family member or anyone. My dad and brother attended with me my senior year. It’s too bad that dress looks all washed out — I loved it, light blue with pink roses.

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Linda put up a Mr. Linky here so that we could link back to these prom/banquet pictures on our blogs. I hope a lot of people do this — I think it would be a lot of fun! 🙂

Here and there

(The Saturday Photo Hunt is below)

Here are some things I’ve seen “around” that I have enjoyed and thought you might, too.

A woman is complete in Christ – nothing more and nothing less. Marriage and/or motherhood may change her worldly status and role, but they do nothing to make her more complete in Christ. Salvation, wholeness, and meaning are found in Christ alone.

  •  Are you familiar with Karla Dornacher? One of her books, Love in Every Room, is one of my favorites and stays out on the end table all the time. I love her style. Susan at By Grace mentioned a few days ago that Karla has a blog now. She’s even having a contest to give away some of her greeting cards!
  • There are some gorgeous 4x4s at Everyday Is a Holiday that someone is using for a baking theme for their kitchen. A baking theme! How perfect for a kitchen. Why did I never think of that? I love Jenny’s quote here: it fits my world:

As artists, we’re not trying to make statements about war, or oppression, or poverty. We’re littler than that. What we think about when we create are the things that you don’t usually bother to think about…the little world that surrounds you when you  sleepily sip your morning coffee…the domestic sights your eyes gaze upon when you do the dishes after dinner…the backdrop of your everyday…the cake you bake on a random Tuesday…the color of the streamers at a kid’s birthday party.

  •  Heather at HELLOmenameisHeather shared pictures of her studio this week. I am trying awfully hard not be covetous. 😀  Talk about the ultimate sewing and craft room. It’s beautiful, tranquil. inspiring. I would so love to have one room to devote to that (no, that’s not a hint to my sons. 🙂 ), but even if you don’t have a whole room, she shared many different little storage techniques.
  • Mrs. Wilt at The Sparrow’s Nest is beginning a series on the woman of Proverbs 31. There is always much food for meditation there and I am looking forward to learning from the Proverbs 31 woman once again. But I always remember, and encourage others to remember, that this ultimate Biblical lady didn’t accomplish all of what is listed there in one day. Sometimes women can get discouraged at all of her accomplishments, but remember this is a picture of a lifetime, not “a day in the life.”
  • Finally, you may have seen this one before as an nominee to the Hidden Treasure Awards that Everyday Mommy sponsored, but this post on Honoring My Covenant at A Dusty Frame has stayed with me for days. In my reading this morning I came to that passage about Joshua and the Gibeonites and the covenant they made, which Joshua needed to keep even though the Gibeonites weren’t totally honest. Then when Joshua and the children of Israel had to battle to defend Gibeon, the Lord marvelously enabled them. I never thought of this passage in regard to marriage, but marriage is a covenant. Something may change in one or both parties of a covenant, but the covenant is still in effect, and God will give grace when we honor our covenants. This and the rest of the post were just so profound and thought-provoking, I wanted to share it with you.

I finished Jane Eyre this week and want to talk about that a little, but I need to get to Wal-Mart and then get some chores done, so it will have to wait. Have a great Saturday!

Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt: Soft

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Theme: Soft | Become a Photo Hunter | View Blogroll

This is Jason, my middle son, when he was about 5. He’s 19 now, and I hope he doesn’t mind me sharing this photo for this theme. 😀 I thought it “fit” because kids and stuffed animals are soft and cuddly, and this shows a “softer” side of a little boy.

My word cloud

You can get one of these at Snap Shirts — they’ll search your blog, make the word cloud, and send you the jpg file.

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What Kind of Donut Am I?

Saw this at Erica’s and tried it out:


You Are a Boston Creme Donut


You have a tough exterior. No one wants to mess with you.
But on the inside, you’re a total pushover and completely soft.

You’re a traditionalist, and you don’t change easily.

You’re likely to eat the same doughnut every morning, and pout if it’s sold out.

What Donut Are You?

I don’t know about the tough exterior, but everything else sounds about right. 🙂